LONDON – Sixty-five years is a long time, but exact details of the 1944 D-Day invasion are not forgotten by the men who experienced it. Gaetano Benza and Albert “Spooney” Sponheimer, two veterans of the D-Day invasion, are on their way to Normandy by way of London for this Saturday’s 65th anniversary. They (and I) are traveling with the Stephen Ambrose D-Day to the Rhine tour. Suffice it to say their stories are amusing and amazing.

The group toured London on Wednesday visiting the Imperial War Museum and the Churchill Museum and Cabinet War Rooms, a branch of the Imperial War Museum. The Churchill Museum and Cabinet War Rooms is a fascinating place for history buffs. As Churchill’s underground bunker in the center of London, few people walking on the streets above knew the war was being managed from below. The underground portion of the building was finished one week before Germany invaded Poland on September 1, 1939.

The Imperial War Museum tells the stories of both World War I and II through a beautiful maze of galleries on three floors. One section is devoted to British children during World War II. One million children were evacuated from London beginning on September 1, 1939 with a second wave of 16,000 evacuated in Spring, 1940 during the German bombing “Blitz” that ended in May 1941. In addition to the galleries, the Trench Experience and Blitz Experience place visitors within those two unique settings, a trench in World War I and an underground family bunker in World War II. 60,000 British civilians, including almost 8,000 children, were killed during the Blitz.

With two D-Day veterans in the group, the time waiting for the bus was as interesting as what was inside the museums.

Gaetano Benza (below) served with the 505 Port Battalion, 279 Company unloading munitions to Omaha Beach. Soldiers had to not only deal with the German counterattack but also the mundane matter of seasickness. Benza was ferried to Omaha Beach aboard a small British transport vessel and recalls a near miss as a bomb struck the supply ship he was unloading but did not go off. “Otherwise, I would not be here,” he said.

Gaetano Benza tours the Churchill Museum and Cabinet War Rooms in London on June 3, 2009.

Born in Brooklyn of Sicilian heritage, Benza was away from home for almost three years during his service from 1943 to 1945. On his return voyage to New York, Benza describes pulling into Pier 90 and seeing hundreds of people on the dock waving to welcome them home. Suddenly he heard his name called over the loudspeaker with orders to report to an officer. Dutifully answering the order, Benza was then escorted off the ship where his mother and uncle, who was a naval officer, were waiting for him. He had five minutes to greet his mother whom he had not seen in three years. After five days at Fort Dix in New Jersey, Benza was allowed to return home to stay. Tears welled up in his eyes as he told the story on Wednesday to Britannica’s Student News Net.

D-Day is as real today as it was 65 years ago for those who served. And now it is the duty of this generation not to forget their service and sacrifice.

Albert “Spooney” Sponheimer shipped out from the United States on January 7, 1944, in preparation for D-Day. Spooney still remembers the British food they were served during the transatlantic crossing – English mutton. “Slimy and rotten” were the words that best described the mutton, Spooney said. “It slid down fast and slid up just as fast.” Another rather unpleasant incident in the mess line with a soldier unable to keep food in his stomach was enough for Spooney. “I ate chocolate bars the rest of the trip across the ocean,” he added. Spooney landed on Omaha Beach on D-Day, serving as a medic.